• J Forensic Leg Med · Oct 2009

    Case Reports

    Three-dimensional reconstitution of bullet trajectory in gunshot wounds: a case report.

    • Katerina Puentes, Francisco Taveira, António J Madureira, Agostinho Santos, and Teresa Magalhães.
    • National Institute of Legal Medicine, North Branch, Jardim Carrilho Videira, 4050-167 Porto, Portugal. alkimed@yahoo.es
    • J Forensic Leg Med. 2009 Oct 1; 16 (7): 407-10.

    AbstractIn the medico-legal assessment of cases of aggression with firearms, imaging techniques have a particularly important role, especially in the study of a bullet's path through the victim's body. The analysis of these trajectories can be performed by the use of three-dimensional reconstitution techniques, namely Three-Dimensional Multi-Slice Computed Tomography (3D-MSCT). This imaging technique has been widely used in fatal cases, as a very important complement of the classical autopsy procedures, becoming known as "virtual autopsy" or "Virtopsy". To our knowledge, no reports describing the use of 3D-MSCT in non-fatal cases have been described in the medico-legal literature. The authors present a case of a man with a gunshot injury, in the context of a multiple aggressor situation, in which it was not possible to extract the bullet. To accurately determine the bullet's trajectory, 3D-MSCT was performed, thus contributing to a more reliable reconstruction of the crime scene in which the victim and the suspects were located.2009 Elsevier Ltd and Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine.

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